You can call universe instances of a multiverse 'spiritual realms' if you like, but they must follow consistent physical laws derived from the theory that predicts them, and they will be causally disconnected from us (i.e. no interaction). This makes the quite unlike any 'spiritual realms' I've heard proposed or described.The point is the spectrum of possible effects is wide and can include couner intuitive results which a possible spiritual realm could fall within.
I'd suggest you do better to imagine your wish-fulfilment fantasy of the best outcomes that could have happened in your life to date; if Everettian Many Worlds holds good, there will be at least one such version of you 'out there' (although having had the best of all possible outcomes throughout life, he won't be much like you)
How does that follow?If consciousness is a possible effect on the quantum world then a spiritual realm of some sort would also be possible.
Our own universe defies classical physics, but I wouldn't call it 'heaven' or a 'spiritual realm'.Like I said if there was a heaven or spiritual realm then I am sure scientists would try to put some rules to it even if it defied classical physics and was counter-intuitive like some of the effects in quantum physics.
I suspect your efforts to find something in the multiverse that fits a spiritual realm are likely to be disappointing - you can't just make up any old tosh and hope that you'll find it in the multiverse.
As already explained, they are mainly predictions of well-established theory, or interpretations of well-established theory. Some are hypotheses, based on observational evidence and grounded in well-established theory.What is the solid evidenvce for some of the speculative ideas in science that are believed and well accepted especially in the cosmos and quantum fields. They are based on thought experiments that really do not have well-supported and solid evidence.
If you want a specific answer, you need to ask a specific question.
Sure, there are metaphysical questions to be asked about whether some of these things can be classed as science, or even whether they can be real - there is a lot of debate over definitions, classifications, and interpretations. Nevertheless, these are intriguing ideas, not least because by straddling the boundaries of such categories, they lead us to question precisely what we mean by our definitions of them.Two writers argue that modern science needs to get a grip on reality, rejecting 'timeless' theories of the universe and the 'fairytale' physics of string theory.
In Farewell to Reality, Baggott now castigates theoretical physicists for indulging a whole industry of "fairytale physics" – strings, supersymmetry, brane worlds, M-theory, the anthropic principle – that not only pile one unwarranted assumption on another but are beyond the reach of experimental tests for the foreseeable future.
Time Reborn by Lee Smolin; Farewell to Reality by Jim Baggott – review
How, for example? both inflation and the cosmological multiverse predict universes with high-level physical laws that are different from ours, but they're derived from the same underlying theory.Don't some of the ideas like superstring theory spectulate and step outside the physical laws of this universe.
All methods of equiry require some basic assumptions. Which assumptions do you think make the method flawed?But if the scientific method makes certain assumptions which it bases its approach on then the method would be flawed. Eveen though it would make sense within a certain parameter it would not in the overall scheme of things and always be grappling with trying to make things fit to that certain materialistic view.
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